Silicon Valley considers itself a meritocracy. As we wrote in our last column, the role of immigrants in creating technology companies that drive wholesale market transitions and ultimately massive market values has been remarkable. Immigrants’ success in Silicon Valley is a testament to an ecosystem open to vision, intelligence, hard work and hustle.

But our meritocracy is also uneven and incomplete, with biases and holes. One persistent failure is in recognizing, supporting and sustaining female leadership. We need to do a better job in recognizing and advancing all forms of diversity.

Despite the fact that women now represent well over 50% of bachelor’s and graduate degree recipients in the U.S., women hold less than 11% of executive positions in Silicon Valley companies (Source: National Center for Education Statistics; Fenwick & West Gender Diversity Study). In the start-up ecosystem in 2016, less than 5% of founders backed by venture capitalists (VC) are women and less than 10% of startup board seats are female held (Source: Pitchbook, theBoardlist).

We have a popular phrase: “money talks.” Perhaps at the root of a lack of support for female leadership in Silicon Valley is the paucity of female venture capitalists driving investment decisions. Less than 5-7% of general partners of leading venture capital firms are women today. (Source: Pitchbook, Techcrunch).
There are many systemic issues that women in the tech ecosystem face:

A misperception that women don’t naturally excel in STEM fields

Half-hearted recruiting efforts based on an assumption that there are so few qualified female candidates

A misguided presumption that female hires need more “work/life” balance and won’t survive the demands of start-up work-around-the-clock cultures

C200: the most prestigious global female executive membership organization formed 35 years ago to advance female CEOs and entrepreneurs.

We believe that female leadership will similarly be a success factor for the emerging Japanese start-up ecosystem, for all the same reasons that we are so committed to advancing all forms of diversity in Silicon Valley. We hope that our struggles can help inform more rapid and effective solutions elsewhere.

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If you want to contact us

We place a high priority on meeting with start-ups that are referred by someone we know. If you aren’t already connected to our network, feel free to send us an email. Forgive us in advance for only responding to cold introductions that are absolutely fascinating.